WBAI
Folio
from the
Pacifica
Radio Archives
This cover sheet created by
Internet Archive for formatting
WBAI
OLIO
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1976^^
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'7S,
PERU — Music from the land of f^acchu
Picchu. Sunday, October 17, 2:00pm.
"LADY OF THE BEASTS"
Friday. Oct. 1, 7:30pm
A special edition of Women's Studies,
In which Viv Sutherland's guest Is
feminist poet Robin Morgan, who reads
from her new book of poetry and takes
calls from listeners,
AUDIO EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
"SEXLIST'byEdBowes
Friday, Oct. 1, 10pm
Wnter-actor-producer-director Bowes
has worked in print, audio, video, and
film. In this performance, he recreates
the story of a group of people he
allegedly met out west. Can he prove
the story?
"AIR" Audio Art from the ZBS Founda-
llon.
Friday, Oct. 15, 10pm
The ZBS Foundatin is dedicated to
developing and extending the capacity
ol artists doing creative work In audio.
Located on a 45-acre farm In Fori
Edward, N.Y,, the ZBS Foundation
offers a five-day residency during which
the artist Is availed of ZBS's extensive
audio facilities. Air was designed for
broadcast by Gregory Shifrin of the ZBS
Foundation.
The Audio Experimental Theatre is
produced by Charles Ruas and funded.
In part, by a grant from the New York
State Council on the Arts.
HYSTERICAL HISTORICALS
Saturday, Oct. 2, 3pm
The radio premiere of the lesbian-femin-
ist musical revue, a bicentennial spoof
of American history written by Doreen
Di Biaggio, Chris Larkin, Robyn Lutsky,
and Jo Ann Schumann Recorded at
WBAI with the original cast. Produced
by Paula Kane and Judie Pasternak.
SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Saturdays. Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30. 8pm
This month, Charles Ruas offers a
perspective on the use of the biograph-
ical method in fiction and history.
Scheduled are interviews with four
writers whose material is biography and
history, On the programs this month:
Geoffrey Wolff, author of Black Sun,
tells how he researched and docu-
mented his work on the ilves of Harry
and Caresse Crosby, Ishmael Reed
talks about his comlc-hislorical novel.
Flight to Canada. In Roots, Alexander
Haley traces the oral history of his
family back to its ancestral origins In
Gambia. West Africa.
INDIA
Sundays, Oct. 3. 17, 31, 1pm
A new series of programs presenting
serious interpretations of Indian cul-
ture. Produced by Bob and Eileei
Zaiisk.
THE TRACK
Sunday,Oct. 3, 2pm
Neal Conan interviews Bill Surface,
author of The Track: A Day In the Lite ol
Sslmonl Park.
MUSIC FROM AMERICA
Sunday, Oct. 3, 8pm
A stereo simulcast (the visual portion
can be seen on WNET) of Leonard
Bernstein conducting the New York
Philharmonic in a program of American
music.
RADIO CITY
Sundays. Oct. 3, 9pm; Oct. 10, 24, 8:30
pm
A new series featuring music, talk, and
variety. Hosted by Sara Fishko,
INVENTION
fiilondays. Oct. 4. 1pm
A new series concerning the nature of
ideas relevant to inventions and inven-
tors. Specific programs feature the
nature of invention as It concerns art,
genius, business, and leaching. Pro-
A new series on the culture of India.
duced by James Umland with special
assistance by Barbara Londin.
WOMAN IN HER JOURNEY THROUGH
MENOPAUSE
Wednesday. Oct. 6, 4pm
A two-part program geared for women
of any age, and concerning physical
symptoms, comparison to menstrua-
lion, the emotional toll, and the advan-
tages/disadvantages of menopause.
Phone calls from listeners Invited.
Produced by Margaret Robinson,
THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO
Thursdays, Oct. 7. 14, 21, 28, 8:30pm
Throughout the year, WBAI will be
presenting broadcasts of vintage radio
dramas. October Is devoted to science
fiction; November to mystery; Decem-
ber to horror. Produced by Paul Wun-
der
SAN FRANCISCO MIMETROUPE
Friday, Oct. 8, 7:30pm
History of this troupe through its first
ten years. The program documents the
new publication on the troupe's history
by Its founder. R-G. Davis, and features
tapes of the actual performances.
WHAT" UP?
Saturday, Oct. 9, 2:30pm
Jamey Gillis discusses his life as a
porno film star. Produced by Verna
Gillis.
RICHARD MINAREK
Wednesday, Oct. 13, 4pm
Jane Solar talks with Richard MInarek, a
foot reflexologist, who claims that feet
can be the body's root of evil. Live, with
phone calls.
ENGLISH ACCENT
Thursday, Oct. 14, 10pm
The first n a regular series of programs
to be produced in London, England, for
broadcast over WBAI, The series ex-
plores all aspects of British life, with
emphasis on the arts. The first program
features song and conversation from
Frank McConnell, a Kent schoolteach-
er. Produced in London by Richard and
Anne Newman, and in New York by
Robbie Barish.
RABI|^4DRANATH TAGORE \
(IS6IM.I;
RITA MAE BROWN
Friday, Oct. 8th, 10:00pm
Jan Albert Interviews the author of
Rubyf ruit Jungle and In Her Way.
THE WORLDS OF BACH AND HANDEL
Sundays, Oct. 17. 8:30pm
An in-depth look, with analysis and
music, into the worlds of these two
composers by The Laughing Cavalier.
For details, see his article in this Folio,
THE LONG RUSSIAN WINTER: "THE
DECEMBRISTS"
An extraordinarily yric four-act opera
by the Soviet composer, Yuri Aiexan-
drovllch Shaporin, performed by a
brilliant Soviet cast under the direction
of Alexander Mehk-Pashayev, If you've
always wished that Tchaikovsky and
Mussorgsky had teamed up to compose
an opera, this performance is for you.
Produced by Kathy Dobkin.
HENS ARE WILLING BUT PEOPLE
ARENT
Friday, Oct. 22, 11pm
Barbara Londin speaks with Steve
Lohn, reporter for several newspapers.
about the modernization of egg farming
and the tailing consumption of eggs . . ,
and other "eggstraneous" matters.
ATAN EARLY AGE
Sunday, Oct. 24, Ip-n
A two-part program. Part 1 , "Child
Prodigies and How They Grow." pro-
duced by Sara Fishko, examines musi-
can whiz-kids, their parents, teachers,
psychologists, and friends. Part 2, "The
Prodigy as Performer," produced by The
Laughing Cavalier, presents historic
recordings by four top-notch violinists
and two lop pianists, made when they
were still young enough to be called
"child prodigies."
SCRIMSHAW
Monday, Oct. 25, 13 Noon
All but a dead art, scrimshaw is still a
whale of a topic Barbara Londin speaks
with Arthur Christy, one of the top
authorities on this subject, and a
scrlmshander himself.
THE NEW YORK CITY CRISIS— ONE
YEAR LATER
Thursday, October 26, 10pm
In the past year, a series of devastating
cuts have been made in most of the
programs serving the people of the city
of New York — health, education, social
service, recreation, transportation, uni-
formed services, environmental protec-
tion, etc., etc. The litany goes on and
on. What has happened to these pro-
grams and to the quality of life experi-
enced by New Yorkers as a result of the
cutbacks? We will be examining the
extent and nature of the cuts, their
effects, and taking alook at what seems
to be in store in the immediate future.
^Ve will also examine the role of the
tinancial community in the City's crisis
and cutbacks, and try to determine how
much of the situation was brought
about by disarray in the City Govern-
ment's own management and priorities.
Following a produced segment, guests
will be Jack Newfield, Columnist of the
Village Voice, and Roger Alcaly, Profes-
sor of Economics at John Jay College.
Produced by Richard Barr and the News
and Public Affairs Department.
MUSIC OFTHE PYGMIES
Sunday, Oct. 31. 2:30pm
Verna Gillis presents the music ot the
pygmies and selections from Colin
Turnbull's book. The Forest People.
FROM THE HAUNTED RADIO
Sunday, Oct. 31 , 10:30pm
A daemonic drama special from the
people who brought you the award-win-
ning series, The Radio. Infernal works
by Lovecrafl, John Collier, Poe. and
others. Music by James Irsay and
Arthur Miller, Recording and technical
effects by David Rapkln. Production by
Charles Potter,
Folio October. 197€ 1
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October, 1976
General Manager
Acting Associate Manager
Announcers/ Live Radio
Business Manager
Chief Engineer
Coordinator T.C B. Productions
Drama, Art & Literature
Folio Editor
Switchboard Operator
Music Department
News
Public Affairs Director
Acting Program Director
Producer of Special Programming
Subscriptions Department
Coordinator of Volunteers
Operations Director
Most of the Above
other
Pacitica Washington Bureau
United Nations Correspondent
Anna Kosof
Steve Post
Margot Adler(on leave)
Lindsey Ardwin
Pepsi Charles°
Bob Fass°
Paul GormanO
Mickey Waldman'-'
Mary Houston ■="
Mike Ed!
Deloris Costello
William Kortum°
Linda Rosechild°
Charles Ruas, Director
Deborah Thomas^
BillKortumO
Jude Quintiere, Director
Ira Weitzman
Abraham Aig
Marly Goldensohn, Director
Celeste Wesson
Richard Harris
Paul Mclsaac
Kathy Kendel
Ira LeibinO
Bill Monaghan
Margaret Mercer
Dick Demenus
Ted Clark
Katherine Ferguson
Betty Pilkington
Part-tinne
Volunlecf//
Indepcndenl
Producer/
GENERAL VOLUNTEERS
Alfredo Bejar, Ron Biederman, Gale Cerel, Dacron Dark, Ken Davis, Jim Freund, Sara
Grollman. Grace Hagen, Joan Hervey, Sue Lynn, Margaret Mercer, Andrew Moses, Alexa
Penzner, Adrienne Piscitello, Stacy Ann Pober, Jay Rottiman, Peter Shamin, Kathy
Smilli, Ptiil Smilti, Geneva Steinberg, Steve Stern, Laurie Vigoda, Sharon Williams.
MUSIC INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS
MicKey Bass, Bernie Brightman, Ted Cohen, Larry Davis, Bill Farrar, Richard Fioravanti,
Sara Fishko, Gary Giddins, Verna Gillis, Marc Gold, Bill Howie, James Irsay, Kathy Kurs,
Manya la Bruja, The Laughing Cavalier, Marian McPartland, llhan Mimaroglu, Tom
Peroiti, Max Salazar, Martin Sokol, Judith Sherman, Chris Whent.
NEWS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS
Lindsay Audin, Richard Barr, Bonnie Bellow, Joan Carra, Liz Christy, Peggy Farber,
Natasha Friar, Ralph Friar, Beth Friend, Jerry Hatch, David Levine, Nina Mende, Dave
Metzger, Peter Milliken, David Nasaw, Mildred Norman, Peggy O'Connell, Terry
Ornstein, Marie Palladino, Gerald Rindler, Dan Sheridan, Jane Solar, Larry Solomon,
Joan Streckfos. Shelly Strickler, Viv Sutherland, Bob Zaiisk, Eileen Zaiisk.
DRAMA, LITERATURE AND ART INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS
Liza Bear, Eric Bender, Courtney Callender, Judith Ghinger, Joe Giordano, Lin Harris,
Rick Harris, Moira Hodgson, Susan Howe, Barbara Londin, Michael Moss, Paul
Oppenheimer, Lynda Perry, Charles Potter, Mike Sappol, Edward M. Schneider, Judith
Vivell.
INDEPENDENT INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS
Jan Albert, Larry Cox, Jim Freund, Lex Hixon, Paula Kane, Neil Marks, Bill Monaghan,
Judith Pasternak, Nanette Rainone, Erica Schwartz, Jeffrey Shaw, Jim Theobald, Irene
Yarrow, Martha Katz.
SUBSCRIPTIONS DEPARTMENT VOLUNTEERS
Betty Fink, Brian Kendel, Graham Kendel, Marc Raskin, Lynn Samuels, David Sweet,
Denton Thor, Paul Wunder.
T.C.B. INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS
Ayanna F. Amirato, Fabir F. Amirato, Herbert X. BIyden, Prof. John HenrlkClarke, John
(J.D.) Davis, Ronald Francis, David Garcia, Sababu Geuka, Manuel Gilyard, Agatha
Graham, Saidi Hekimu, Conrad Lynn. Rev, C. Herbert Oliver, Esther Rand, Clayton Riley,
Joe Walker, Lenna Williams.
WBAI LOCAL BOARD
Vernon Andrews, Ted Conant, Ralph Engelman (Chairman), George A. Fox, Carolyn
Goodman, Edwin A. Goodman, Oscar Hanlgsberg, Alexander Hixon, Ken Jenkins. David
Lampel, Theresa Ornstein, Thelma Rechetnik.
Dear Subscriber,
Sometime in August, Ralph Engleman,
the Chairman of the WBAI local board
called me with the news — I was "it."
"It" meaning the new General Manager
ofWBAI.
I accepted the job with some mixed
feelings. I knew that paychecks were
not very regular, the station needed
money desperately, but I also knew that
Pacitica and WBAI had a very special
meaning to me. Trevor Thomas, on
becoming President of Pacitica in De-
cember 1961, expressed it most elo-
quently:
The men who conceived the idea of
Pacitica in 1946 and implemented the
project in 1949 and those who came
alter were radicals in the sense that the
word means a desire to get at the root of
things. Most of them were and still are,
looking for something expressed by
worn words like integrity, love and
regard for truth; for the best way to live
and not just how to make a living . . .
the faculty, groping search for their
meaning and application is a large
measure of what we are all about, both
as human beings and in a lesser, but
still important sense, in this coopera-
tive — Pacifica.
These are the principles that pulled me
into WBAI. The knowledge that we can
stand for truth, for integrity on the
airways, we can be the voice of the
people, a voice so often silenced.
As long as I am the General Manager of
the station, 1 will be committed to the
philsophy of Pacifica: "What we want . .
. is not only a qualified . . . expression
of the best art and thought of our time,
but also an uncompromising freedom of
inquiry, joined with a clear understand-
ing of the responsibilities of freedom."
Lewis Hill, 1955.
We all need WBAI! Together we can
make this period in BAI's history a time
of creative thought, growth and devel-
opment. When we think back very few
Utopian ideas survived in history. Pacif-
ica-WBAI is still with us!
I am very excited about my new job. I
think we'll have a great time growing
and building our philosophies together.
Thank you for your continued concern
and<support.
Anna Kosof
CHANGES IN
REGULAR PROGRAMMING
The following programs have new time
slots:
SALUD: Thursday evenings at 9:00PM
GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC: Saturdays at
7;00pm.
POETRY: Mondays at 8:30pm.
THE RADIO WILL NO LONGER BE
HEARD IN REGULARLY SCHEDULED
HALFUHOUR SEGMENTS. Instead, the
crew of THE RADIO will be working on
90-minute specials about every two
months. The first of these new, exten-
ded programs will be the Halloween
special. From the Haunted Radio, to be
broadcast Sunday, October 31,
10:30pm.
PACIFICA OFFICERS
•R. Gordon Agnew Hon. Chairperson
*Ken Jenkins Chairperson
David B. FInkel
*Jonas Rosenfield, Jr.
"Thelma Meltzer
'Peter Franck
•Oscar Hanlgsberg
Nina Bauman
Pearl Skotnes
"George Fox
Robert Kultner
Mary Mann
President
Vice President
2nd Vice President
3rd Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
Assistant Sec'y.
Assistant Sec'y.
Assistant Sec'y.
Controller
'BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Isabel Aiegria, Dupuy Bateman III, Joseph C. Belden, Carol A. Breshears, Charles
Brousse, Michael R. Davis, Ralph Engleman, Edwin A. Goodman, Danny Samuels, Peter
Tagger, Tracy A. Westen.
2 October, 1976 Folio •Part-time
WBAI Is on the air 24 hours a day. Frequency: 99.5 fm. Our transmitter is located in the
Empire State Building, and we broadcast with an Effective Radiated Power of 5.4 KW
(horizontal) and 3.85 KW (vertical). Power equivalent to 50,000 watts at 600 feet.
Antenna: 1223 feet above average terrain. Height above sea level: 1515leet. The studios
are located at 359 East 62nd Street. New York, N.Y. 10021. Phone (21 2) 826-0880.
WBAI Is owned and operated by the Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit corporation. The
other Pacifica stations are KPFA, 2207 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley. California, 94704;
KPFK, 3729 Cahuenga Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, 91604; KPFT. 419 Lovett
Boulevard, Houston. Texas, 77006; and WPFW. 868 National Press Building, Washing-
ton, DC. 20036 (Construction Permit). Subscriptions are transferable but not refundable.
The duration of programs scheduled Is approximate. The dates alter listings Indicate
past or future broadcast. The program listings are copyrighted (?) 1976, WBAI) and are
not to be reprinted without written permission. Extracts may be reprinted for highlight
listings Folio listings typeset by Myrna Zimmerman/ Mz Graphics.
WBAI Is not responsible for the return or safety of unsolicited tapes or manuscripts.
Production costs lor the Folio are made possible. In part, through ■ grant Irom the
Corporation lor Public Broadcattlng.
Produced and directed by Ira Weilzman.
The WBAI Free Music Store returns, live
from Studio C on Saturday, October 2,
1976 at 9:00pm. And we have an
exciting Opening planned.
There have been a few changes in our
format for this season. The most
important one is that we've had to cut
our schedule down to only Saturday
evening concerts. However we will be
running two special series on Thursday
evenings which we're calling, appropri-
ately enough. The Thursday Series, it
will consist of The Composer's Forum,
six concerts of new works by young
composers (see below for details); and
Evenings for New Music, two concerts
presented by members of The Center for
the Creative and Performing Arts of
Buffalo (see below). Anyway, you are
all invited, as usual, to join us in
person, for any of our Free Music Store
concerts. Studio C is located at 359
East 62nd Street, just west of First
Avenue. Seating is informal, bring
pillows or other comforts. Admission,
of course, is free, but why not give us a
dollar or two (it's still the cheapest
ticket in town!).
Here's the October Schedule-
Saturday, Octobers Opening Night!
MUSiCAORBiS
David Clark, electric and double bass,
percussion, synthesizer. Kitty Brazel-
ton, voice, flute. Tom Stephenson,
drums, vibes, cello, percussion. Susan
Gelletly, piano, organ, melodica, bells.
Caille Colburn, harp, keyboards. Folk,
medieval, rock, symphonic, avant
garde, jazz, pop.
Thursday, October 14
THE COMPOSERS FOFKJM
Presenting the work of Art Kreger and
Jackson MacLow. The Composer's For-
um presents six concerts of new works
by young composers. Thursday, No-
vember 11; December 9; February 10;
March 10; April 14. Begins at 8:30PM!
Saturday, October 16
ANTONiOZEPEDA
Performs Pre-Columbian drums, flutes,
whistles and ocarinas all between 500
and 1000 years old, many, if not most of
which are the original instruments from
the Aztec, Mayan and Toltec civiliza-
tions.
Saturday, October 23
EUGENE DRUCKER, VIOLiN
Former concert master of the Juilliard
Orchestra, member of the Speculum
Musicae, and participant in the Marl-
boro Festival in recital.
Thursday, October 28
EVENING FOR NEW MUSIC
Presented by the Center for Creative
and Performing Arts of Buffalo. Works
by Harrison Birtwistle, Gilbert Amy,
Iannis Xenakis, Ben Johnston and
Betsy Jolas. First in a series of two
Thursday evenings, the next on Feb--
ruary 3.
Saturday, October 30
THE HERITAGE QUINTET
Ransom Wilson, flute. Joel Timm,
oboe. Esther Lamneck, clarinet. Mi-
chael McCraw, bassoon. David Jolley,
horn. Winners of Artists International
Annual Young Musicians Auditions.
OCTOBER
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1
5:00 HOUR OF THE WOLF
The Friday Morning Science Fiction
Extravaganza. With Jim Freund.
7:00 ROOM 101
With Steve Post. "Life Is one long
process of getting tired."
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (9/31)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Irsay can see you, by the dawn's early
light?
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
HONORABLE INTENTIONS: THE RE-
ALITIES OF AMERICAN GIVING
Rebroadcast from 9/30.
1:00 CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF
There is a person named Lin Rosechild
who's been saving all her nervous
energy for this, her live debut on WBAI.
She may or may not have a guest.
2:00 SCRAPPLE FROM THE APPLE
Jazz, presented by Jamie Katz.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot Adier.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
With Marty Goldensohn and Celeste
Wesson. (10/2)
7:15 ANIMAL CRACKERS
A weekly program concerning pet care,
exposing exploitative practices toward
animals, and rescuing abandoned or
lost pets. Produced by the many "an-
imal crackers" of New York, people with
too many pets to take in another, but
too much heart to let one go stray.
Presented by Rudi Ehrl.
7:30 "LADY OF THE BEASTS"
In this evening, special edition of
Women's Studies, Viv Sutherland's
guest is feminist poet Robin Morgan,
who reads from her new book of poetry
and fields phone calls from listeners.
9:30 MANHATTAN SCREENING
Independent film community in New
York. Non-theatrical, documentary, dis-
tribution, educational and political
films are discussed.
10:00 AUDIO EXPERIMENTAL
THEATRE Ed Bowes presents Sexllst,
a radio performance. Ed Bowes has
used video and film as a "moviemaker."
He is also a writer, actor, director,
producer, "moviemaker." For this per-
formance he recreates the story of a
group of people he allegedly met out
west. "Sexllst is the story of 3 parent-
less families. /They live on a lake. /Four
children, 7, 8, 9, and 10 androgenous
and dedicated to luxury. /A brother and
sister, twins/They are in love, and live
in anticipation of the thin blood of their
child./ A woman designs an experiment
to measure the frequency of sexual
response in subjects who are engaged
in purposeful activity with members of
affinitive sexual groups. /Each family
wants the lake to itself/They wage a
war with their armies of servants." (Ed
Bowes) This program is funded by a
grant from the New York State Council
on the Arts. The Audio Experimental
Theatre is produced by Charles Ruas.
(This program contains frank language.
II you feel you might be offended by
such language, please tune away until
11:55.)
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NIGHTOWN
Live radio with Bill Monaghan.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio, with a live person.
8:00 NEWS
Rebroadcast from last night.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
THE SATURDAY MORNING CHIL-
DREN'S SHOW
With Paul Mclsaac.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LUNCHPAIL
Live radio with Paul Gorman. "Assassi-
nation is the extreme form of censor-
ship." (Shaw)
2:00 FOOTBALL
It's that time of year again. Barbara
Londin speaks with Dr. William Arens,
anthropologist, about the true nature of
this great American sport.
3:00 HYSTERICAL HISTORICALS
The radio premiere of the lesbian-femin-
ist musical revue, a bicentennial spoof
of American history by Doreen Di
Biaggio, Chris Larkin, Robyn Lutsky,
and Jo Ann Schumann. Recorded at
WBAI with the original cast. Produced
by Paula Kane and Judie Pasternak.
4:00 GREAT MOMENTS IN LATIN
Music
First-time recordings. Presented by
Max Salazar.
5:00 LATIN NOSTALGIA
With Dr. Ken Rosa.
6:00 PROGRAM
MISCELLANY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ed Bowes
6:30 NEWS
Presented by Abraham Aig. (1|/3)
7:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Produced by Tom Whitmore. (1|/7)
8:00 MARION'S CAULDRON
Occult news and views, and the
month's "astro trends." Presented by
Marion Weinstein.
9:00 THE WBAI FREE MUSIC STORE
11:00 STEVE KATZ: 4 ESSAYS
(This program contains frank language.
If you feel you might be offended by
such language, please tune away for the
next 30 minutes and rejoin us at 11:30.)
1) Essay on the Usefulness of Arro-
gance
2) Essay on Collaboration
3) Essay on Swimming without Getting
Wet
4) Essay on Self-Knowledge
11:30 MISCELLANY
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
With Lindsay Audin — Sherre Hite,
author ol The Hite Report (a controver-
sial study of female sexuality), dis-
cusses the reality of sex and the myths
that influence common sexual behavior.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio with Jan Albert.
8:00 NEWS
Rebroadcast from last night.
8:30 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
HERE OF A SUNDAY MORNING
Music. Presented by Chris Whent.
11:00IN THE SPIRIT
Presented by Lex Hixon.
1:00 INDIA
The first of a series of programs
presenting a serious interpretation of
Indian culture. This program, an intro-
duction to the literature of India in the
form of a radio montage. Produced by
Bob and Eileen Zaiisk.
2:00 THE TRACK
Neal Conan interviews Bill Surface,
author of The Track: A Day in the Life of
Belmont Park.
2:45 LARRY HARLOW
Verna Gillis speaks v/ith Larry Harlow,
Latin pianist, composer, and producer.
Produced by Verna Gillis. Prepared and
edited by Edward Haber,
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot AdIer.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Presented by Abraham Aig. (10/4)
7:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
"The Future of the Seas" — Lindsay
Audin analyses the recent Law of the
Sea Conference and details the expecta-
tions of conflict and cooperation in the
exploitation of the Oceans.
8:00 MUSIC FROM AMERICA
A stereo simulcast (the visual portion
will be shown on WNET) of Leonard
Bernstein conducting the New York
Philharmonic Orchestra in a program o'
American music.
9:00 RADIO CITY
Music talk, variety, with Sara Fishko.
10:00 EVERYWOMANSPACE
With programs on women in the arts
and our personal relationships, on the
politics of self-defense, independence
and survival, this is a place for all
women to be together. Lesbian, bisex-
ual, heterosexual, and celibate, well-
known and not-known, the voices of
women from different racial and ethnic
groups, of all classes and ages, are
heard, and every woman can share her
experience. Live shows, with phone
participation as well as written contri-
butions from women listening, make
this a space where we can talk and
listen, explore our culture, and grow.
Produced by Irene Yarrow.
11:00 ECHOES FROM TARA
Music and lyric of Celtic people. Pre-
sented by Bill Monaghan. ("Every Irish-
man, the saying goes, has a potato in
his head.")
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCMENETS
LIVE RADIO
With a live person, place, or thing.
Folio October, 1976 3
"K^ONDAY. OCTOBER 4
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5
5:00 MASSAGE PARLOR
Live radio with Mike Sappol.
7:00 THE MONDAY MORNING SHOW
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS
Rebroadcast from last night.
^9:30 MORNING MUSIC: THROUGH
THE OPERA GLASS
Mascagni: II Piccolo Marat. Presented
by Marty Sokol.
12:30 THE ANNOUNCER'S REPORT
During which your announcer will read
you the Program Announcements, pro-
mote everything happening in town
which is in some way connected to
WBAI, tell you what we need this week
(money, a piano, volunteers, or what-
ever), and maybe say or play something
funny.
1:00 INVENTION
Invention, inventions and inventors are
the topics of a new series of programs
^concerning the nature of ideas. Astro-
physicists Stephen Rosen, the author
of Future Fact, discusses with James
Umland the inventive process and the
products of soon-to-be-realized inven-
tions. Future programs on the nature of
invention as it concerns art, "lay inven-
tions," genius, business, and teaching
will be scheduled. Produced by James
Umland, with special assistance by
Barbara Londin.
2:00 ADVENTURES IN JAZZ
Presented by Mickey Bass.
4:00 IRSAY IN THE AFTERNOON
"A combination of early morning at the
Molt Haven frieght yards, feeding time
at the zoo, and a Sixth Avenue trolley
rounding a curve, with an intoxicated
woodpecker thrown in for good mea-
sure." (Lexicon of Musical Invective)
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
A report of the day's events with Marty
Goldensohn. (10/5)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
A tantalizing and terrible truth.
7:15 COMMUNITY NEWS
A roundup of neighborhood news from
community newspapers in N.Y.C.
7:30 GETTING AROUND
Discussions, whispers, and guffaws on
artists and the arts. Moderated and
produced by Courtney Callender. (10/5)
8:30 POETRY
Presented by Susan Howe,
10:30 MAJOR CONTEMPORARY
WRITERS
(This program contains frank language.
If you feel you might be offended by
such language, please tune away lor the
next 85 minutes and rejoin us at 11:55)
Jerzy Kosinski, Cockpit. The author
reads a selection from this novel, in
which the central character discovers
survival is equatable to the ability to
endure. Versatile and elusive Jerzy
Kosinski is interviewed by Charles
Ruas. (Rebroadcast from last Oct.)
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SWAN SONG
Live radio with the versatile and elusive
Mickey Waldman.
4 October, 1976 Folio
5:00 NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS
Transmitter maintenance and repair,
with MikeEdl.
7:00 THE TUESDAY MORNING SHOW
Live radio with Paul Gorman. "Behold, a
greater than Solomon is here." (Bible)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by Manya La Bruja.
12:00 MIDDAY HARRISMENT
Live radio with Richard Harris.
2:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
(10/3)
3:00 GETTING AROUND (10/4)
4:00 WEATHERBIRO
Jazz with Gary Giddins.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
A report thereof by Celeste Wesson.
(10/6)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 WHAT IS A NICE SOCIALIST
SCHOOL LIKE YOU. . .
doing in a decaying capitalist joint like
this? Representatives of three radical,
alternative schools try to answer this
question with David Levine. (10/7)
8:30 MISCELLANY
8:45 ELECTRONIC MUSIC
Electronic music placed in a socio-
economic context, emphasizing isola-
tion of musical environment by today's
music industry. Musical selections con-
sist mostly of compositions that are
either commercially unrecorded or un-
available in the U.S. Many composers
and musical personalities from the U.S.
and abroad are often guests on this
program. Produced and presented by
llhan Mimaroglu.
9:45 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING
HONEST
Gay programming featuring news, inter-
views, information, and listener partici-
pation via the phones. Produced by Neil
Marks.
11:00 THE LESBIAN RADIO SPECTAC-
ULAR WITH A CAST OF MILLIONS
Paula Kane and Judith Pasternak pre-
sent lesbian music, lesbian poetry,
interviews, and personal testimony,
"We Are Everywhere," news and re-
views.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
REFLECTIONS
Live radio with Deloris Costello.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6
5:00 PASSAGES
Live radio with Ondina Flore.
7:00 COUNTERFORCE
Live radio with Jeff Greeenfield.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/5)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
"The decisive reason for the support of
atonal composers by the reactionary
bourgeoisie is that the hermetic sect of
atonalily has proved to be a suitable
tool for the reckless propaganda of
repugnant cosmopolitanism leading to
the separation of the intelligentsia from
the people. The center of this sect is
situated in the United States, but its
branches are dispersed all over the
world." (From a review of the music of
Schonberg, 1949). Jim Theobald pre-
sents some more recent reckless pro-
paganda.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
T.C.B
Produced by Deloris Costello.
2:00 BIX AND BEYOND
Jazz with Dick Sudhalter.
4:00 WOMAN IN HER JOURNEY
THROUGH MENOPAUSE
A lively show in two segments: a panel
discussion and then a question and
answer period for the listening audi-
ence, geared for women of any age.
Physical symptoms, comparison to
menstruation, the emotional toll, the
support (?) of co-workers, the medical
profession, the disadvantages/advan-
tages of menopause, resource materials
and groups, with a feminist perspective
for the active New York woman. Pro-
duced by Margaret Robinson,
6:00 PROGRAM
MISCELLANY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
6:30 NEWS
A report of same, with Celeste Wes-
son and Marty Goldensohn. (10/7)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 INTERNATIONAL REPORT
Tonight's report includes a look at the
government in Bologna. Produced by
Richard Barr.
8:30 ETHNIC GOLD
Produced by Marc Gold.
9:00 VISIONS: PRIVATE AND PUBLIC
A dialogue between two
painters: Joe Giordano and Bill Sulli-
van. The discussion revolves around the
formal environmental and symbolic
aspects of Sullivan's paintings.
10:00 A DELICATE BALANCE
Marian McPartland shares music and
reminiscences with fellow musicians.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NUANCES
Live radio with Pepsi Charles.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7
5:00 A CONSORT OF EARLY MUSIC
Two comic/ ironic examples of Baroque
program music: The Fencing School by
Heinrich Schmelzer, and The Operating
Table by Marin Marais; Music from the
time of the Crusades, performed by the
Early Music Consort; Isaac: Chansons
and Motets; Schuetz: Sacred Choral
Music (1648), excerpts. Produced and
presented by Ted Cohen.
7:00 ROOM 101
Live radio with Steve Post. "Do not do
unto others as you would they should
do unto you. Their tastes may not be
the same." (Shaw)
9:00 PROGRAM
NEWS (10/6)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by Judy Sherman.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SUMMER WRITING COURSE WITH
ALLAN GINSBERG
Offered at the Naropa Institute in
Boulder, Colorado, Summer, 1975. The
program features Ginsberg's 10-lecture
series on references to and readings
from the work of William Carlos Wil-
liams. In addition, the poet discusies
and reads from these anthologies: Don
Allen, New American Poetry, New
American Poetics; Samuel Beckett, The
European Caravan; Jerome Rothenberg,
America: A Prophecy, The Revolution of
the Word; Ezra Pound, From Confuslus
to Cummlngs; The Collected Works of
William Carlos Williams; G.C. Strelov,
Australian Epic Poetry; Jack Kerouac,
Mexico City Blues. The series, was
recorded at Ginsberg's Kerouac School
for Disembodied Poetics. Hosted by
Charles Ruas. Produced by Joe Frank.
This program is aired each Thursday at
this time.
2:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Produced by Tom Whitmore. (10/2)
3:00 WHAT IS A NICE SOCIALIST
SCHOOL LIKE YOU. . .
doing in a decaying capitalist joint like
this? (10/5)
4:00 JAZZ SAMPLER
With Bill Farrar.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Report of the day's events by Celeste
Wesson and Marty Goldensohn. (10/8)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 CARING FOR THE SICK WHEN
THE CITY STOPS CARING
Part 1: The Doctors
A discussion with Dr. Richard Carlson,
who resigned from Lincoln Hospital in
despair; and Drs. Peter Moyer, Lewis
Goldfrank, and Harold Osborn, who are
still fighting to maintain services at
municipal hospitals. Produced by Jerry
Hatch. Pan 2 will be broadcast Oct. 21 .
(10/8)
8:30 THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO
DRAMA: DIMENSION X
WBAI presents a rebroadcast of the
1950 radio drama, Mars is Heaven by
Ray Bradbury. Series produced by Paul
Wunder.
9:00 SALUD: GROW YOUR OWN
Liz Christie discusses the larger issues
of Greeen.
10:00 THE BALLPARK THAT ATE THE
BRONX
David Levine investigates the rebuilding
of Yankee Stadium.
11:00 BOOTSTRAPS
A continuing monthly series dealing
with the "hidden" problems of our
society and the ways in which people
cope with them. Topics include: Batter-
ed Wives, Battered Children, Rape,
Violence Aggression, Drug Addiction,
Alcoholism, and Gambling. Also, the
varied problems of the physically handi-
capped.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
The New York Film Festival
With guests (directors, screen writers,
actors, critics). Live and on tape. The
subject — Films and Festivals. Hosts
will include Paul Mclsaac.
1:00 LIVE RADIO
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8
5:00 HOUR OF THE WOLD
More from Jim Freund.
7:00 ROOM 101
With Steve Post.
9:00 PROGRAM
NEWS (10/7)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
About James Irsay's program, one
listener wrote: "I listened because it's a
challenge to my endurance; there's
always a fascination with the gro-
tesque."
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
CARING FOR THE SICK WHEN THE
CITY STOPS CARING
Rebroadcast from last night.
1:00 SARIDEINES
Viv Sutherland interviews the 77 year
old sculptor and artist.
2:00 SCRAPPLE FROM THE APPLE
Jazz with Jamie Katz.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot Adier.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
A repoil of it by Celeste Wesson and
Marty Goldensohn. (10/9)
7:15 ANIMAL CRACKERS
SeeOctoljer 1 listing.
7:30 THE SAN FRANCISCO MIME
TROUPE: THE FIRST TEN YEARS
The first of two programs presenting
the history of the S.F. Mime Troupe
during its first ten years. The programs
document the new publication on the
troupes history by its founder, R.G.
Davis. This program deals with the
transition from the S.F. Actors Work-
shop and the radicalization of the
troupe, through its confrontation with
the Park and Recreation Commission.
Then, through the years of the Minstral
Show, Bill Braham, The Diggers, and
their origins with the Troupe. On the
program will be Robert Shere, Lawrence
Ferlinghetti, Joe Bellan, Sandy Archer,
Marshal Krause, and tapes of the actual
performances during this period. The
program is narratd by Ron E. Davis.
9:30 FADE IN
Program of film reviews, interviews and
discussions on movies and related
topics with Judith M. Kass, author and
editor specialist in film.
10:00 RITA MAE BROWN
Jan Albert interviews the author of
Rubyfrull Jungle and In Her Way.
11:45 MISCELLANY
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NIGHTOWN
I Live radio with Bill Monaghan.
Carson McCullers
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio and nothing but live radio.
8:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/8)
9:00 THE SATURDAY MORNING CHILf
DREN'SSHOW
Presented by Paul Mclsaac.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LUNCHPAIL
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
2:00 OPEN SLOT (Look outi)
2:30 WHAT'S UP?
Jamey Glllis discusses his life as a
pomo film star. Produced by Verna
Glllis.
2:30 WHAT'S UP?
Jamey Gillis discusses his life as a
porno film star. Produced by Verna
Gillis.
4:00 THE LATIN MUSICIANS HOUR
Variety music presented by Max Sala-
zar.
5:00 LATIN NOSTALGIA
With Dr Ken Rosa.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Abraham Aig. (10/10)
7:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Produced by Tom Whitmore. (10/14)
8:00 SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Charles Ruas interviews Virginia 8.
Carr, biographer of Carson McCullers.
The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter represents
an original approach to the problem of
biography. Ms. Carr's image of Miss
McCullers is drawn from conversa-
tions with those who knew her in life.
What emerges is a deeply textured
portrait of Miss McCullers set in the
context of her complex relations with
men, women, and art.
9:00 THE WBAI FREE MUSIC STORE
PRESENTS MUSICA ORBIS
With David Clark, electric and double
bass, percussion, synthesizer; Kitty
Brazelton, voice, flute; Tom Stephen-
son, cello, drums, vibes, percussion;
Susan Gelletly, piano, organ, melodica,
bells; Caille Colburn, harp, keyboards.
Folk, medieval, rock, symphonic, avant
garde, jazz, pop. You are invited to join
us Live in Studio C, 359 East 62nd
Street, just west of First Avenue.
Produced by Ira Weitzman. STEREO.
11:00 RONALD SUKENICK: "OUT"
(This program contains (rank language.
If you feel you might be offended by
such language, please tune away for the
next 30 minutes and rejoin us at 11:30.)
"He wonders when it's going to die.
Soon he hopes. It keeps getting thinner
if that's possible. The eye bulges farther
and farther out of its head. He can't look
at the thing without wanting to vomit.
Sometimes he feels like vomiting when
he looks at it." Ronald Sukenick reads
from his work. Produced by Mike
Sappol.
11:30 MISCELLANY
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LIVE RADIO
With DelorisCostello.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio with Jan Albert. "Good
Americans, when they die, go to Paris."
8:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/9)
8:30 HERE OF A SUNDAY MORNING
Words and music to wake up to on
Sunday morning. J.S. Bach: Cantata
47: Wer sich sibsl Ertiohet," and Part III
of Sounds and Sweet Ayres: English
music in the Tudor Age. This week, the
music of William Byrd. Devised and
presented by Chris Whent.
11:00 IN THE SPIRIT
Produced by Lex Hixon.
1';00 OPEN SLOT (Don't fall In.)
2:00 A CONVERSATION WITH DON
STACY
Don Stacy, artist and teacher at the New
School, speaks with Terry Ornstein.
3:00 THE PIPER IN THE MEADOW
STRAYING
Folk and folk-bsed music from the
British and American traditions. Pro-
duced by Edward Haber.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot AdIer.
6';00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
6:30 NEWS
A report of the day's events by Abraham
Aig. (10/11)
7:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
Lindsay Audin presents a 3-part series
on centers of political power outside
the control of the electorate such as
think tanks, foundations and financial
authorities.
8:30 RADIO CITY
Talk, music, variety, with Sara Fishko.
10:00 EVERYWOMANSPACE
See October 3 for details.
11:00 BRAZILIAN POPULAR MUSIC
Presented by Mildred Norman.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEBLE
With Lindsay Audin. Political candi-
dates from various third (and fourth)
parties are interviewed and subjected to
listener scrutiny.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 11
5:00 MASSAGE PARLOR
Live radio with Mike Sappol.
7:00 MONDAY MORNING SHOW
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
9:30 MORNING MUSIC: THE LAUGH-
ING CAVALIER
I have decided to show off my musical
green thumb and present a bouquet of
compositions wherein allusion is made
to flowers, plants, and trees. Among
the flora which will blossom; Dietrich
Buxtehude's Ich bin eine Blume zu
Saron, and Johann Strauss the Young-
er's Tales from the Vienna Woods. This
garden is lovingly tended by your
faithful horticulturist. The Laughing
Cavalier.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
AN INTERVIEW WITH RUBY ROHLICH
LEAVITT
The feminist anthropologist talks about
herself and her newly-edited book.
Women Cross Culturally: Change and
Challenge, which is an anthology of
papers by women around the world.
Produced by Helene Schiff .
1:00 ARCHITECTURE
Hosted by David Pearson,
2:00 ADVENTURES IN JAZZ
With Mickey Bass.
4:00 IRSAY IN THE AFTERNOON
"Liszt's music is all but unplayable by
anyone but himself; it represents im-
provisations without order and without
ideas, as pretentious as they are bi-
zarre." (Lexicon of Musical Invective)
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn and
Celeste Wesson. (10/12)
7:00THE FACT MOMENT
7:15COMMUNITYNEWS
A roundup of neighborhood news from
community newspapers in New York
City.
7:30 GETTING AROUND
Arts commentary and criticism. Pre-
sented by Courtney Callender. (10/12)
8:30 POETRY
Susan Howe presents readings by Alice
Motley. Ms. Notley. a New Yorker, is
the author of Incidentals in Day World.
Her forthcoming book is entitled Alice
Ordered Me to be Made, and will be
published by All-Slar Press.
9:00 BETWEEN THE TRACKS
A rock and roll radio show, produced by
Peter Bochan.
10:30 MAJOR CONTEMPORARY WRIT-
ERS: PABLO NERUDA
(This program contains frank language.
If you feel you might be offended by
such language, please tune away for the
next 30 minutes and rejoin us at 11:30.(
The late Chilean poet. Pablo Neruda,
reads his work at the Poetry Center of
the 92nd Street "Y. ' The poet recites in
Spanish, with his translators Robert BIy
and Martin Eshleman reading the Eng-
Photo and text from a photographic novel in preparation, Love Story: A Gunlight,
by Jessica Raimi.
MANIFESTO OF THE CAT BURGLER
CATS BELONG TO THE PEOPLE
Every man, woman and child should
have a cat. A cat brings you back to
reality once a day, because you always
have to go home to feed it.
A CAT PROMOTES SOCIAL
CONSCIOUSNESS
A cat is a different species from you. It
reminds you that you, as a human
being, have a responsibility to get along
with all the species.
A CAT GETS RID OF MICE AND OTHER
PESTS
This is a socially beneficial method
because it relies on the ecologically
sound, natural principle of the food
chain. There's no possibility of overkill,
as with the commercially available
petrochemical pesticides that the oil
companies are using in their evil
scheme to poison the world. When you
have a cat, the mice are still there, just
restrained to boundaries tolerable to
man.
CATS HAVE QUALITIES YOU CAN
ADMIRE
Cats are stealthy, resourceful, discreet
and able to leap tall boundaries in a
single jump. They remind the true
revolutionary of the essential character
istics of the guerilla warrior.
MORE CATS FOR MORE PEOPLE! WE
MUST CONTINUE THE STRUGGLE!
The Cat Burgler demonstrates a hot cat to a prospective (bemused) customer.
Folio October. J 976 5
lish versions. This rare reading was
recorded in 1966 and includes Reslden-
cla en la Terra and other late works.
Edited by Alfredo Bejar. Produced by
Charles Ruas.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SWAN SONG
Live radio with Mickey Waldman.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12
5:00 NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS
Transmitter maintenance and
with Mike EdI.
repair
7:00 WHEN YOU AWAKE YOU WILL
REMEMBER EVERYTHING
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
10:00 MORNING MUSIC: A BERLIOZ
BASH His Te Deum, Requiem, Songs
and Symphonle Fantastlque. On Octo-
ber 29, 1874, a music critic for the
Boston Daily Advertizer wrote the fol-
lowing review: "It needs no gift of
prophecy to predict that Berlioz will be
utterly unknown a hundred years hence
to everybody but the encyclopedists
and the antiquarians." (The name of the
critic — indeed the critic himself — has
not survived his review.) Produced by
Kathy Kurs.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MIDDAY HARRISMENT (or. The RH
Factor) Live radio with Richard Harris.
2:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
(10/10)
3:00GETTING AROUND (10/11)
4:00WEATHERBIRD
Jazz, presented by Gary Giddins.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
A report of the day's news by Marly
Goldensohn or Celeste Wesson. (1/13)
7:00THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 AFTER THE NEWS
A look at the issues behind the news.
Listen to Program Announcements for
DETAILS (10/14)
8:30 A CONSORT OF RECORDED
MUSIC Jude Quintiere talks with and
listens to a performance of recorded
music by Pete Rose and Joe Schwarz.
Recorded at WBAI and produced by
Jude Quintiere.
9:45 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING
HONEST Gay programming featuring
news, interviews, information, and lis-
tener participation via the phones.
Produced by Neil Marks.
11:00 THE LESBIAN RADIO SPECTAC-
ULAR WITH A CAST OF MILLIONS
Paula Kane and Judith Pasternak pre-
sent lesbian music, lesbian poetry,
interviews, and personal testimony,
"We Are Everywhere," news and
reviews.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
REFLECTIONS
Live radio with Deloris Costello.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13
5:00 PASSAGES
Live radio with Ondina Flore.
7:00COUNTERFORCE
Live radio with Jeff Greenfield.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/12)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
More experiments with yours ears. A
6 October. 1976 Folio
description of how people think music
should be taught and how they did or
did not learn themselves. Fantasized
music, concrete music, and jes' plain
home country aleatoric music (uninten-
tional for the most part). Produced and
presented by Jim Theobald.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
T.C.B.
With Executive Producer,
Deloris Costello.
2:00 BIX AND BEYOND
Jazz, with Dick Sudhalter.
4:00 RICHARD MINAREK
Jane Solar talks with Richard Minarek, a
foot reflexologist, who claims that feet
can be the body's root of evil. To find
out more about this little-known, but
ancient treatment, tune in. Live, with
phone calls.
6:00 PROGRAM
MISCELLANY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn and
Celeste Wesson. (10/14)
7:00THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 WASHINGTON REPORT
A report from the city of politicians and
bureaucrats, produced by Pacifica's
Washington Bureau.
8:30 OPEN SLOT (People at work.)
9:00 RADIO WAVE
An artists' program produced by Liza
Bear, editor of Avalanche. On this
program, Nancy Holt, who has just
returned from Utah, where she spent a
year installing a large-scale, outdoor
sculpture, Sun Tunnel.
Liza Bear
10:00 SPECIAL JAZZ
Downbeat critic Chuck Berg talks with
and explores the music of saxophonist
Billy Harper. Produced by Kathy Kurs
and Chuck Berg.
Kathy Kurs
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NUANCES
Live radio with Pepsi Charles.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14
5:00 A CONSORT OF EARLY MUSIC
Selections from The Notebook of Anna
Magdalena Bach (1725) or, "The family
that plays together stays together."
More songs from the Carmlna Burana;
Lassus: Penitential Psalms. Produced
and presented by Ted Cohen.
7:00 ROOM 101
Steve Post answers the perennial ques-
tion, "Can a man take fire in his bosom
and his clothes not be burned?" (Bible)
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/13)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC: "Music Alter
Pearl Harbor"
Presented by Jude Quintiere.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SUMMER WRITING COURSE WITH
ALLAN GINSBERG
See Oct. 7th for details (10/9)
2:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC (10/9)
3:00 PUBLIC AFFAIRS PROGRAM
Rebroadcast from last Tuesday after the
News. Listen to Program Announce-
ments for details.
4:00 JAZZ SAMPLER
Jazz, with Bill Farrar.
6:00 PROGRAM
MISCELLANY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
6:30 NEWS
With Marty Goldensohn and Celeste
Wesson. (10/15)
7:00THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 SHORT TAKES
What's longer than a news story, and
shorter than a documentary? A Public
Affairs magazine produced by Richard
Barr. (10/15)
8:30 THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO
DRAMA: X MINUS ONE
WBAI presents a rebroadcast of the
1951 radio drama. Pebble In the Sky, by
Isaac Asimov. Series produced by Paul
Wunder.
9:00SALUD
Health issues with Martha Katz.
10:00 ENGLISH ACCENT
The first in a regular series of programs
to be produced in London, England for
broadcast over WBAI. The series ex-
plores all aspects of British life with
emphasis on the arts. This program
features song and conversation from
Frank fylc Connell, a Kent school-
teacher. Produced in London by Rich-
ard and Anne Newman, and in New York
by Robbie Barish.
11:00 THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL
A report from the New York Film
Festival with interviews and listener
phone calls. Produced and hosted by
Paul Mclsaac.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15
5:00 HOUR OF THE WOLF
The Friday Morning Science Fiction
Extravaganza with Jim Freund.
7:00 ROOM 101
Live radio with Steve Post, who "never-
theless in the time of his old age, was
diseased in his feet." (Bible)
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/14)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
With James Irsay.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SHORT TAKES (10/14)
1:00 WOMEN'S STUDIES: IMPACT
E.R.A.
Viv Sutherland interviews Anita Miller,
Project Director of the California Com-
mission on the Status of Women. The
Commission has done some of the
most advanced work on the amendment
in the country.
THE WORLDS OF BACH AND HANDEL
I was delighted by Jude Quintiere's
suggestion that I do a series on Bach
and Handel, my two favorite com-
posers. That's something I've wanted to
do since my days in college radio at
Princeton, nearly ten years ago.
I've observed that musicologists tend to
think of Bach and Handel primarily in
terms of whether the initial eighth note
In bar 26 in the violas is a C-Sharp or a
D. They don't seem to attach any real
importance to what Bach and Handel
were like as human beings, how they
thought of their contemporaries, and
who their friends, colleagues, admirers,
mentors, and nemeses were. 1 think that
the answers to such questions are
extremely important since, to me, it is
not possible to understand any great
man or woman without understanding
the culture and the milieu in which he or
she flourished or withered. That's why
this new series has been given the title,
THE WORLDS OF BACH AND HAN-
DEL. My goal is to put my two favorite
composers into perspective with
respect to their own era and subsequent
ones.
The first programs in the series were
broadcast last month. In the first, I
played recordings of the music of Bach
and Handel which were made during the
acoustic era, that is, before 1925. The
second program offered the Kyrie and
Gloria of Bach's B Minor Mass, from the
first recording of the work, under the
direction of Albert Coates, and featur-
ing such singers as Elisabeth Schu-
mann and Friedrich Schorr. The re-
mainder of this historic perofrmance
will be broadcast on Sunday, October
17, at 8:30pm.
Keyboard instruments with which Han-
del was acquainted are the subject of
the show to be broadcast on Sunday,
October 31, at 8:30pm. I'll play record-
ings of several pipe organs which have a
Handelian pedigree, as well as excerpts
from a record of Handel Harpsichord
pieces played on his favorite harpsi-
chord, a large manual instrument made
in Antwerp in 1612 by the famous
Flemish harpsichord builder, Joannes
Puckers.
These programs are but the beginning.
Future shows will examine historical
recordings of the works of Bach and
Handel, the music of their friends and
enemies, of their teachers and
students, and of the musicians who
exerted influence on them. It's going to
be a long, sometimes unpredictable,
occasionally irritating, but always
rewarding journey into THE WORLDS
OF BACH AND HANDEL. I hope you
will join me on this voyage of explora-
tion and that you will find the trip as
fascinating and as enjoyable as I know I
will.
All best.
The Laughing Cavalier
2:00 SCRAPPLE FROM THE APPLE
Jazz, presented by Jamie Katz.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot Adier.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENT:^
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Celeste Wesson and Marty
Goldensohn. (10/16)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 THE BRONX ZOO
All about zoos. Barbara Londin speaks
with William G. Conway, Director of the
Bronx Zoo.
9:00 DANCE MAGAZINE
Presented by Moira Hodgson.
10:00 AUDIO EXPERIMENTAL THEA-
TRE
Air: Audio Art from the ZBS Founda-
tion.
Sound awareness In activated space.
Acoustic lenses/Audio optics. Trans-
ducer. Any of various substances or
devices, such as a piezoelectric crystal
or photo electric cell, that convert input
energy of one form into output energy
of another. From the Latin, transducere
— to lead across, transfer. The ZBS
Foundation Is dedicated to developing
and extending the capacity of artists
doing creative workm audio. Located on
a 45-acre farm in Fort Edward, N.Y., the
ZBS Foundation offers a five-day resi-
dency, during which the artist is availed
totally of all ZBS facilities — facilities
which include a 12-input console and
four-track recorder, as well as a large
studio. This program presents audio
experimentation by ZBS. Air was de-
signed for broadcast by Gregory Shifrin
of the ZBS Foundation. The Audio
Experimental Theatre is produced by
Charles Ruas, and funded, in part, by a
grant from the New York STate Council
on the Arts.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEfMENTS
NIGHTOWN
Live radio with Bill Monaghan.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Presented by a person.
8:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/15)
9:00 THE SATURDAY MORNING CHILH
DREN'SSHOW
Presented by Paul Ivlclsaac.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LUNCHPAIL
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
2:00 OPEN SLOT
3:00 MAPS OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Maps ot Consciusness IV. Jose Silva
speaks about mind control, links be-
tween inner and outer realities, dreams,
ESP. psychic healing, universal mind,
UFO's, the brain, energy levels and the
space which one can create where
agreements lie and problems are
solved. Produced by Lynda Perry.
4:00 THE LATIN MUSICIANS HOUR
Max Salazars guest is band leader Larry
Harlow.
5:00 LATIN NOSTALGIA
With Dr. Ken Leo Rosa.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:00 NEWS
Reported by Abraham Aig.
7-;00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Produced by Tom Whitmore (10/21)
8:00 SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Charles Ruas interviews Geoffrey Wolff
on Black Sun: The Brief Transit and
Violent Eclipse ot Harry Crosby. The
biography of Harry Crosby, founder of
Black Sun Press, recounts the meteoric
literary career of a young Boston Brah-
min, who seemed to have every option.
In the Paris of the twenties. Crosby's
rebellion took the form of a frantic
attempt at liberation through passion-
ate, systematic exhaustion of life's
possiblities. Crosby's incandescent
poetic career ws "violently eclipsed " by
his committing murder and suicide.
9:00 THE WBAI FREE MUSIC STORE
PRESENTS ANTONIO ZEPEDA
Performing on Pre-Columbian drums,
flutes, whistles, and ocarinas, al. be-
tween 500 and 1 ,000 years old. Many, if
not most of these, are the original
instruments from the Aztec, lyan,
and Tollec civilizations. You are invited
to join us live in Studio C, 359 East 62nd
Street, just west of First Avenue.
Produced by Ira Weitzman. STEREO.
11:00 open reading
(This program contains frank language.
If you feel you might be offended by
such language, please tune away for the
next 55 minutes and rejoin us at 1 1 :S5.(
Random sampling of open readings
around town. The good, the bad, and
the ugly. Recorded on location at
Sobosseks, St. Marks Poetry Project,
and elsewhere. Recorded by Mike Sap-
pol and Bill Kortum. Produced by Mike
Sappol
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
With Jan Albert.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Jan Albert continues her marathon
presentation. Send coffee. Send mon-
ey.
8:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS
8:30 HEREOF A SUNDAY MORNING
Words and music to wake up to on
Sunday morning. J.S. Bach: Cantata
#169 "Gott soli allein mein Herze
hat>en": and Part IV of Sounds and
Sweet Ayres: English Music of the
Tudor Age. This week, the music of
William Byrd. Devised and preented by
Chris Whent.
11:00 IN THE SPIRIT
With Lex Nixon.
1:00 AN INTRODUCTION TO THE
CLASSICAL POETRY OF INDIA
Barbara Miller, Professor at Barnard
College, discusses Sanskrit poetry and
reads from her recently published trans-
lations.
2:00 PERU
Music from the land of Macchu Picchu.
Bradford Graves reads a selection from
William Bronk's The New World. Pre-
sented and produced by Verna Gillis.
3:00 A CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVE
Dr. George Cronk and his guest. Ken
Boa. discuss "the technological soci-
ety" from the standpoint of historic
Christianity. The discussants seek to
demonstrate the liberating power of the
Gospel of Christ with reference to the
alienating structures of techno-scien-
tific organization and ideology. Pro-
duced by George Cronk and Jude
Quintiere.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot Adier.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Abraham Aig. (10/18)
7:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
With Lindsay Audin. See Oct. 3 for
details (10/19).
8:30 THE WORLDS OF BACH AND
HANDEL
The First Recording ot the B-Mlnor
Mass. Part 2. The Credo, Sanctus, and
Agnus Dei from J.S. Bach's B-Mlnor
Mass. as recorded by Elisabeth Schu-
mann, Margaret Balfour, Walter Wid-
dop, Fnedrich Schorr, and the London
Symphony Orchestra under the direc-
tion of Albert Coates. Issued in this
country as Victor Set M-104. this
unjustly neglected landmark in the
history of recorded sound was the only
recording of the B-Mlnor Mass in record
catalogues for nearly 25 years. Presen-
ted by The Laughing Cavalier.
10:00 EVERYWOMANSPACE
See Folio listing for Oct 3.
11:00 ECHOES FROM TARA
Music and lyric of Celtic people. Pre-
sented by Bill Monaghan.
11:55PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LIVE RADIO
With a live person.
SWAN SONG
Live radio with Mickey Waldman who,
hopefully, will ask listeners for one-
liners for the Folio.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 18
5:00 MASSAGE PARLOR
Live radio with Mike Sappol.
7:00 THE MONDAY MORNING SHOW
With Paul Gorman.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/17)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC: THROUGH
THE OPERA GLASS
Boieldieu: La Dame Blanche. Presented
by Marty Sokol.
12:30 THE ANNOUNCER'S REPORT
During which your announcer will read
to you the Program Announcements,
promote everything happening in town
which is in way connected to WBAI, tell
you what we need this week (money, a
piano, volunteers, a camel, etc.), and
maybe say or play something funny,
1:00 INVENTION
The artist as an inventor is discussed by
conceptual artists Robert Barry and
Donald Burgy, with James Umland.
Barry and Burgy describe some of their
work and consider the nature of the
inventive process in art. Produced by
James Umland with special assistance
by Barbara Londin.
2:00 ADVENTURES IN JAZZ
Presented by Mickey Bass.
4:00 IRSAY IN THE AFTERNOON
Music and talk, fun and games, pre-
sented by James Irsay.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn and
Celeste Wesson. (10/19)
8:30 POETRY
Readings and discussions with poets.
Produced by Susan Howe.
9:00 BETWEEN THE TRACKS
A rock and roll radio show. Produced by
Peter Bochan.
10:30 BORGESATTHE-Y"
Last April 29, WBAI broadcast live the
appearance of Jorge Luis Borges, the
Argentian man-of-letters, at the 92nd
Street "Y." This program rebroadcasts
that evening, in which Borges com-
mented on poems and stories read in
Spanish by Professor Emer Rodriguez
Monegal of Yale, and in translation by
poets WS. Merwin and Richard How-
art. Borges is the author of numerous
books of short stories, essays, poems,
and fabrications including FIcclones,
Labyrinth, Dream Tigers, and The
Bestiary.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19
5:00 NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS
Transmitter repairs and maintenance
with Mike EdI.
7:00 THE TUESDAY MORNING SHOW
With Paul Gorman, live and with it,
man.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEMS (10/18)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by Sara Fishko.
12.1/ PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MiDtMYHARRISMENT
With Richard Harris, whose mind is a
poien'' ; lethal weapon.
2:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
(10/17)
4:00 WEATHERBIRD
Jazz, presented by Gary Giddins.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
A report of it by Marty and Celeste.
(10/20)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 AFTER THE NEWS
A look at the issues behind the news.
Listen to Program Announcements for
details (10/21)
8:30 BILL HOWLE'S MAGGOTS
Spanish Giants of the Sixteenth Cen-
tury. The music of Antonio de Cabezon
and lomas Luis de Victoria. Produced
and presented by Bill Howie.
9:45 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING
HONEST
Gay programming featuring news, inter-
views, information, and listener partici-
pation via the phones. Produced by Neil
Marks.
11:00 THE LESBIAN RADIO SPEC-
TACULAR
11:00 THE LESBIAN RADIO SPEC-
TACULAR WITH A CAST OF MILLIONS
Paula Kane and Judith Pasternak pre-
sent lesbian music, lesbian poetry,
interviews, and personal testimony,
"We Are Everywhere. " news and re-
views.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
REFLECTIONS
L.ve raolo with Deloris Costeilo.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20
5:00 PASSAGES
Live radio with Ondina Fiore.
7:00 COUNTERFORCE
Live radio with Jeff Greenfield.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/19)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by Jim Theobald. This show
will discuss the question of whether or
not music is dead and. if not. why not?
What can we do to help? Tune in and
hear something you may not have heord
before. New music with Arlo Chives.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
T.C.B.
Esther Rands Housing Notebook.
2:00 BIX AND BEYOND
Jazz, with Dick Sudhalter.
4;00 OPEN SLOT (Fali out.)
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn and
Celeste Wesson. (10/21)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 INTERNATIONAL REPORT
The first compulsory sterilization law
has recently been passed in Maharash-
tra State in India. This program explores
the social, political, and medical impli-
cations of this measure for India and
the world. Produced by Eileen anr* Bot'
Zaiisk.
8:30 ETHNIC GOLD
Produced by Marc Gold.
9:00 TALKING ABOUT ART
Judith Vivell begins a series of pro-
grams on photography as an art form. In
the first program some of the important
questions and issues surrounding the
medium, and the artists using it, will be
posed, fvlarvin Heiferman, Director of
Castelli Graphics, John Marmaras and
Jan Gruver, photographer/artists, will
participate.
Judith Vivell
10:00 A DELICATE BALANCE
Jazz, presented by Marian McPartland.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NUANCES
Live radio with Pepsi Charles.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21
5:00 A CONSORT OF EARLY MUSIC
Sacred music by two of England's
earliest great composers, John Dunst-
able and Christopher Tye; English lute
music of the Renaissance; Keyboard
music of Orlando Gibbons; Further
selections from The Notebook of Anna
Magdalena Bach (the Bach clan after
dinner, of a winter's evening, guaran-
teed to warm your cockles). Produced
and presented by Ted Cohen.
7:00 ROOM 101
Live radio with Steve Post.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/20)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC: ON
BROADWAY Today's program is devot-
ed entirely to the American classic
Porgy and Bess by George Gershwin,
8 October, 1976 Folio
Ira Gershwin, and DeBose Heyward. Ira
Weitzman reviews the current revivial of
the opera, and plays comparative cuts
from the various recordings of the work.
Presented live.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SUMMER WRITING COURSE WITH
ALLEN GINSBERG
For extensive details, see Folio copy of
October?.
2:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Produced by Ton Whitmore. (10/16)
3:00 PUBLIC AFFAIRS PROGRAM
Rebroadcast from October 19, after the
News.
4:00 JAZZ SAMPLER
Presented by Bill Farrar.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
With Marty Goldensohn. (10/22)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 CARING FOR THE SICK WHEN
THE CITY STOPS CARING
Part 2: The Nurses. Produced by Jerry
Hatch. (10/22)
8:30 THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO:
DIMENSION/
WBAI presents a rebroadcast of the
1950 radio drama. The Martian Chron-
icles by Ray Bradbury.
9:00 SALUD: GROW YOUR OWN
Liz Christie discusses the greater
issues of Green.
10:00 WHAT IS SCIENCE FOR?
SCIENCE AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST
The first in a monthly series which will
explore the motives behind scientific
research and application. Tonight: is
science objective or do values enter into
scientific research? Produced by Jerry
Hatch.
11:00 THE NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL
A report from the New York Film
Festival, with interviews and listener
phone calls. Produced and hosted by
Paul Mclsaac. An open-ended program,
followed by Program Announcements
for Friday.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22
5:00 HOUR OF THE WOLF
The Friday Morning Science Fiction
Extravaganza. Presented by Jim
Freund.
7:00 ROOM 101
Live radio with Steve Post.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS(10/21)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Prevented by James Irsay.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
CARING FOR THE SICK WHEN THE
CITY STOPS CARING
Part 2: The Nurses (10/21)
1:00 WOMEN'S STUDIES
A rebroadcast of Robin Morgan reading
from Lady of the Beasts.
2:00 SCRAPPLE FROM THE APPLE
Jazz, presented by Jamie Katz.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn (10/23)
7:15 ANIMAL CRACKERS
Produced by the many "animal crac-
kers" of New York, people with too
many pets to take in another, but too
much heart to let one go stray. Presen-
ted by Rudy Ehrl.
7:30 THE LONG RUSSIAN WINTER:
"THE DECEMBRISTS"
Yuri Alexandrovitch Shaporin's opera in
four acts, completed in 1953. An extra-
ordinarily lyric Soviet opera which com-
bi' ^s the best elements of the Golden
Age of Russian Opera (notably Tchai-
kovsky and Mussorgsky) with the most
successful aspects.ot Soviet Realism.
The recording (virtually unavailable in
this country) features a brilliant cast,
including A. Pirogov, I. Petroc, G.
Nelepp, E. Verbitskaya, and A. Ivanov.
The Orchestra and Chorus of the Bol-
shoi Theater are conducted by A.
Melik-Pashayev. If your taste in opera
runs to gut emotion, soaring romantic-
ism, and music you'll "go out hum-
ming," don't miss this rare perfor-
mance. Produced by Kathy Dobkin.
10:00 MANHATTAN SCREENING
The independent film community in
New York. Non-theatrical, documen-
tary, educational and political films are
discussed.
11:00 HENSARE WILLING BUT
PEOPLE AREN'T
Barbara Londin speaks with Steve
Lohn, reporter for the Press in Bingin-
ham. New York and the New York
Times, about the modernization of egg
farming and the falling consumption of
eggs . . . also other "eggstraneous"
matters.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
Live radio with Bob Fass.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER
THE NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio.
8:00 NEWS (10/22)
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
THE SATURDAY MORNING
CHILDREN'S SHOW
Presented by Paul Mclsaac.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LUNCHPAIL
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
2:00 TONA: A SONG OF MINE OWN
MAKING
Tona is a young Native American of the
Cayuga Nation. He speaks candidly to
Natasha Friar about his life and contin-
ual seach for identity in an enigmatic
world not of his people's making.
Produced by Natasha Friar.
4:00 LATIN MUSICIANS HOUR
The year 1949 in Latin jazz and popular
music, as well as the news events of
'49. Presented by Max Salazar.
5:00 LATIN NOSTALGIA
With Dr. Ken Rosa.
6:00 PROGRAM
MISCELLANY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
6:30 NEWS
A report of the day's events by Abraham
Aig. (10/28)
7:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Produced by Tom Whitmore. (10/28)
8:00 SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Charles Ruas interviews Alex Haley,
author of Roots. In Roots, the author
utilizes oral history to trace and recon-
Alex Haley
struct his ancestral origins in Africa.,
The work reveals man's undiminished
capacity for preserving his history,
through oral accounts. Starting with a
great tribal historian in Gambia, West
Africa, he recounts how from 1750 his
family evolved through slavery to the
present day. Among his other writings,
Mr. Haley is the acclaimed author of
The Autobiography of Malcolm X.
9:00 THE WBAI FREE MUSIC STORE
PRESENTS EUGENE DRUCKER,
violinist
Fromer concert master of the Juilliarc
Orchestra, member of the Speculun-
Musicaeand participant in the li^arlborc
Festival in recital. You are invited tc
join us live in Studio G. Produced by Irs
Weitzman.
11:00 PHILISTINE:
Any person who believes in commun
ism but is timid and shrinks from clas;
struggle. He is a "fair weather" soldie
who supports communism when it i
easy to do so but deserts when thi
going gets rough. Philistinism is a tern,
of abuse. "What is philistine? A hollov
gut, full of fear and hope, that God havi
mercy!" (Lenin) Poetry and music b'
Jim Brody, Tina Darragh, George "Bon
go Joe" Coleman, Captain Beefhear
and the Magic Band, Paul Violi, an
others. Produced by Mike Sappol.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
Live radio with Bob Fass.
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio with Jan Albert.
8:00 NEWS (10/23)
8:30 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
HERE OF A SUNDAY MORNING
Words and music to wake up to o
Sunday morning. J.S. Bach, Cantat
^56, "Ich will den kreuzstbe gem
tragen", and Part V of Sounds an
Sweet Ayres: English music of th
Tudor Age. This week the music c
Thomas Morley. Devise and presente
by Chris Whent.
11:00 IN THE SPIRIT
With Lex Nixon, in the flesh.
1:00 AT AN EARLY AGE, PART 1
Child prodigies and How They Grow
Musical whiz-kids, their parents, teac
hers, psychologists, and friends pondei
the plight of the prodigious few. Pro-
duced by Sara Fishko.
AT AN EARLY AGE, PART 2
The Prodigy as Performer
Historic recordings made, many years
to have a!
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jago, by four top-notch violinists and
]lwo superb pianists — all between the
■gas of 11 and 21. Compiled by The
Laughing Cavalier.
3:00 THE PIPER IN THE MEADOW
STRAYING
Folk and folk-based music from the
British artd American traditions. Pro-
duced by Edward Haber.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot Adier.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Abraham Alg. (10/25)
7:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
Lindsay Audin continues his Investiga-
tions of energy and science with an
effort to expose the economic bases of
technology. For details, listen to Pro-
hjie, gram Announcements (10/26)
*'*8:30 RADIO CITY
■'^Talk, music, and variety. With Sara
FIshko.
'rtl|10:00 EVERYWOMANSPACE
■•' ''S'See Folio listing for Oct. 3.
11:00 BRAZILIAN POPULAR MUSIC
^' Presented by Mildred Norman.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
Live radio with Bob Pass.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 25
>:00 COUNTING SHEEP
.Ive radio with Jan Albert.
'^00 THE MONDAY MORNING SHOW
.ive radio with Paul Gorman.
):00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
«eWS( 10/24)
tIAPPY BIRTHDAY, DEAREST
SCHANI!
Hie Laughing Cavalier requests the
Jleasure of your company at a cham-
JMgne breakfast in celebration of the
!l51st anniversary of the birth of Johann
]3trauss the Younger. Among the guests
iwho have already accepted - on recor-
jllngs. of course - are Leopold Stokow-
Iski, Erich Klelber, Lotte Lehmann, Emil
i/on Sauer, Moriz Rosenthal, and Willi
iSoskowsky. Listeners must provide
:helr own strawberries and Dom Perig-
:lon,'61. R.S.V.P.,99.5FM.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
jSCRIMSHAW
An all but dead art . . . but a whale of a
loplc. Barbara Londin speaks with
Arthur Christy, one of the top authorl-
:les on this subject and a scrlmshander
timself.
1:00 ARCHITECTURE
With David Pearson.
1:00 ADVENTURES IN JAZZ
'resented by Ivlickey Bass.
t:00 IRSAY IN THE AFTERNOON
James plays— music and otherwise.
Ill
an i
m ):00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
t COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
« WISCELLANY
):30 NEWS
\ report of the day's events by Marty
Soldensohn. (10/26)
':00 THE FACT MOMENT
MS COMMUNITY NEWS
^ rouridup of neighborhood news from
:ommunlty newspapers In New York
:ity.
r:30 GETTING AROUND
Arts reportage, moderated and pro-
duced by Courtney Callendar. (10/26)
8:30 POETRY
Susan Howe presents Gilbert Sorren-
tino, poet and novelist, who reads from
his latest works. Among other works,
he has written Black and While, The
Darkness Surrounds Us, and the novels
Splended-Hotel, and Flawless Play Re-
stored.
9:00 BETWEEN THE TRACKS
A rock and roll radio show. Produced by
Peter Bochan.
10:30 JORGE-LUIS BORGES AT
COLUMBIA
Argentinian poet, essayist, and short
story writer Jorge-Luis Borges met with
the creative writing program at Colum-
bia University In an Informal interview
with students. He discussed metaphor
and reality and answered questions
about his works and reading. Taped on
location at Columbia.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCMEENTS
SWAN SONG
Live radio with Mickey Waldman.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26
5:00 NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS
Transmitter maintenance and repair. By
MikeEdl.
7:00 TUESDAY MORNING SHOW
Live radio with Paul Groman.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/25)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by Mickey Waldman.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MIDDAY HARRISMENT
Live radio with Dickie Harris.
2:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
(10/24
3:00 GETTING AROUND
Arts reportage. (10/25)
4:00 WEATHERBIRD
Jazz presented by Gary Giddlns.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn. (10/27)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:15 SCIENCE AND MEDICAL NEWS
REPORT
A review of recent news In science and
medicine, including explanations of
research findings and a discussion of
their social Implications. Produced by
Eileen and Bob Zailsk.
7:30 AFTER THE NEWS: THE
ELECTION
The Public Affairs Dept. reports on
upcoming elections. (10/28)
8:30 THIS IS THE WAY IT GOES
Composers play their own works. Pre-
sented by Jerry Grossman and Judith
Sherman.
9:45 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING
HONEST
Gay programming featuring news, inter-
views, information, and listener partici-
pation via the phones. Produced by Nell
Marks.
11:00 THE LESBIAN RADIO SPECTAC-
ULAR WITH A CAST OF MILLIONS
Paula Kane and Judith Pasternak pre-
sent lesbian music, lesbian poetry.
Interviews, and personal testimony,
"We Are Everywhere," news and re-
views.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
REFLECTIONS
Live radio with Delorls Costello.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27
5:00 PASSAGES
Live radio with Ondina Flore.
7:00 COUNTERFORCE
Live radio with Jeff Greenfield.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/26)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
With Jim Theobald. Music to alter the
curval " of the universe by. Part
LMKX
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
T.C.B.
Live radio with Oeloris Costello.
4:00 OPEN SLOT.
Stop. Look. And Listen.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Marty Goldensohn reports on the day's
events. (10/28)
7:30 WASHINGTON REPORT
News from the capital, produced by
Pacifica's Washington Bureau. For de-
tails, listen to Program Announce-
ments.
8:30 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
By WBAI's new Station Manager, Anna
Kosof. "What is liberty? Equal freedom
for all to do whatever they wish within
the framework of the law. When may
one do whatever one wishes? When one
Is a millionaire. Does freedom provide
each person with a fortune? No. What is
a person without a fortune? A person
without a fortune is not one that does
whatever he pleases, but one who Is
treated In any way it pleases others."
(Dostoevsky)
So, send money.
9:00 RADIO WAVE
An artists' program produced by Liza
Bear, editor of Avalanche. This program
features Tina Girouard, who has just
done a performance In Geneva and Is
one her way to New Orleans for a
museum show, "Five artists from
Louisiana."
10:00 ESPECIALLY JAZZ
Abdul Gamal talks with and listens to
the music of Junior Cooke. Produced by
Abdul Gamal.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NUANCES
Live radio with Pepsi Charles.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28
5:00 A CONSORT OF EARLY MUSIC
An all-Mozart program, for no particular
occasion. With excerpts from his let-
ters: an attempt at a glimpse of the
elusive man behind the music. Pro-
duced and presented by Ted Cohen.
7:00 ROOM 101
Live radio with Steve Post.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/27)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by Jude Quintiere.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
SUMMER WRITING COURSE WITH
ALLAN GINSBERG
For complete details, see Folio listing
for October 7.
2:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC (10/23)
3:00 PUBLIC AFFAIRS PROGRAM
Rebroadcast from Oct. 26, after the
News.
4:00 JAZZ SAMPLER
Presented by Bill Farrar.
6:00 PROGRAM
MISCELLANY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Marty Goldensohn. (10/29)
7:00 THE FACT MOMENT
7:30 AFTER THE NEWS: THE
ELECTIONS
The Public Affairs IDept. reports on the
upcoming elections. (10/29)
8:30 THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO
DRAMA: X MINUS ONE
WBAI presents a rebroadcast of the
1950 radio drama. The Green Mills of
Earth by Robert Helnlein. Series pro-
duced by Paul Wunder.
9:00 SALUD
Jerry Hatch speaks with Ruth Desmond
of the Federation of Homemakers, one
of the original consumer food lobbies,
and with Ronald J. Glasser about his
latest book. The Body is the Hero,
which Is a study of the body's own
defenses.
(Note: ENGLISH ACCENT and FILMS
will be preempted this week to bring
you the following special program.)
10:00 THE CITY IN CRISIS
ONE YEAR LATER
Since last fall. New York's citizens have
been reeling under a steady onslaught
of devastating cuts In most of the
programs that serve them. What does
the scorecard look like? To what extent
has the quality of life been eroded? How
responsible has the financial commun-
ity been for this situation, and how
much is the city's own management to
blame? We will be presenting the
results of our research and attempting
to forecast what the coming months
hold in store. Guests will be Jack
Newfield, Village Voice columnist, and
Roger Alcaly, Professor of Economics
at John Jay College. Produced by
Richard Barr and Ihe News and Public
Affairs Deptartment.
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
Live radio with Bob Fass.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29
5:00 THE FRIDAY MORNING SCIENCE
FICTION EXTRAVAGANZA
With Jim Freund.
7:00 ROOM 101
With Steve Post.
9:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/28)
10:00 MORNING MUSIC
Presented by James Irsay.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
PUBLIC AFFAIRS PROGRAMS
Rebroadcast from Oct. 28, after the
News.
1:00 WOMEN'S STUDIES
Women in Senegal. This begins a new
series of programs on women In other
countries. VIv Sutherland will be inter-
viewing both black and white women on
the status of women in the African
countlres.
2:00 SCRAPPLE FROM THE APPLE
Jazz presented by Jamie Katz.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot AdIer.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
With Marty Goldensohn. (10/30)
Folio October, 1976 9
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31
7:15 ANIMAL CRACKERS
Presented by Rudi Ehrl. See Oct. 1
listings for details.
DANCE PROGRAM Is preempted to
bring you the following special. Dance
will return in two weeks, same time.
7:30 NEWARK BOYS CHORUS
On Friday October 29th from 7:30 to
9:00 P.M. T.C.B. Productions will pre-
sent, LIVE, from Studio "G", the New-
ark Boys Chorus: a group of 32 young-
sters whose musical accomplishments
have won the hearts and critical acclaim
of Pablo Casals, Harry Belefonta, Pope
Paul VI and Leonard Bernstein.
Their repertoire encompasses classical
pieces, gospel, pop and Rock music.
The "raison d'etre' (not to be) of the
chorus is the Newark Boys Chorus
School founded in Newark in 1969. They
have appeared under Leonard Bern-
stein, Pierre Boulez, Eugene Ormandy,
Robert Shaw and Henry Lewis.
The host for this program will be Ernest
Swiggett of T.C.B.
For further information call Deloris
Costello, 826-0880.
9:00 FADE IN
Program of film reviews, interviews and
discussions on movies and related
topics with Judith M. Kass, author and
editor on films.
10:00 ADIO EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
Live radio with Bob Pass.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio with a person.
8:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/29)
9:00 THE SATURDAY MORNING
CHILDREN'S SHOW
With little Pauly Mclsaac.
2:00 LIVE FROM NEW YORK
WBAI rebroadcasts, on tape, a live
concert of American music in conjunc-
tion with the Center for New Music, The
Kitchen, and Jean Francois Vallee of
Radio France, which was performed in
Studio C, Studio A, Studio B, Edit B,
and other places throughout the station
via satellite to Paris, France (France
Musique). Music by Cage, Carter, Cop-
land, Ives, Wolff, Wuorinen, MEV-NY
(Musica Ellettronica Viva), Gregory
Reeve, Richard Teitelbaum, Garret List,
Claudia Polli, Maryanne Anacher,
Anthony Braxtton, Ursula Oppens, Fred
Sherry, Jude Quintiere, Joe Lee Wilson,
and the Un-Holy Modal Rounders.
Produced by Louis Dandrel (France
Musique) and Jude Quintiere. This
program was originally aired live on
Julys, 1976.
4:00 THE LATIN MUSICIANS HOUR
Emilio Castro sits in for Max Salazar
with a variety show.
5:00 LATIN NOSTALGIA
With Dr. Ken Rosa.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Abraham Aig. (10/31 )
7:00 GRASSROOTS OF MUSIC
Country music, produced by Tom Whit-
more. (11 /4)
8:00 SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
Charles Ruas interviews Ishmael Reed,
author of the recently published Flight
to Canada. Relating a flight to freedom
against a backdrop of the Civil War, the
author presents a comic cast that
includes slaves, "massas," and even
Old Abe himself. Flight to Canada is
Ishmael Reed's 5th novel. Editor-in-
Chief of Yardbird Review, he was
written two books of poetry.
9:00 THE WBAI FREE MUSIC STORE
PRESENTS THE HERITAGE QUINTET
Ransom Wilson, flute; Joel Timm,
Oboe; Esther Lamneck, clarinet;
Michael McCraw, bassoon and David
Jolley, horn. Winners of the Artists
International Annual Young Musicians
Auditions. You are invited to join us
Live in Studi C, 359 E. 62nd Street.
Produced by Ira Weltzman. STEREO.
11:00 DRASTIC MEASURES - A Pro-
gram of (Mostly) Live Performances
Kathy Acker (The Black Tarantula) and
friends perform an excerpt from Florida:
A Continuing Worit recorded at The
Kitchen in Soho. Also to be heard,
Ntosake Shange, Meredith Monk, Ei-
leen Myles, and Susan Howe. Produced
by Judith Ghinger.
5:00 THE MORNING AFTER THE
NIGHT BEFORE
Live radio with Jan Albert.
8:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEWS (10/30)
8:30 HEREOF A SUNDAY MORNING
Words and music to wake up to on
Sunday morning. J.S. Bach: Cantata
#49, "Ich geh' und suche mit ver-
langen"; Part Vi of Sounds and Sweet
Ayres, English music In the Tudor Age.
This week, the music of John Dowland.
Devised and presented by Chris Whent.
11:00 IN THE SPIRIT
With Lex Hixon.
1:00 INDIA
The life and work of Rabindranath
Tagore. A special program about the
Indian writer, poet, artists, and music-
ian who won the Nobel Prize in litera-
ture in 1913. This program includes
critical discussions and readings from
Tagore's works, including an interview
with Dr. Amiya Chakravarty, Tagore's
personal secretary. Produced by Bob
and Eileen Zaiisk.
2:00 OPEN SLOT
Don't look back.
2:30 MUSIC OF THE PYGMIES
With selections from Colin TurnbuH's,
The Forest People. Narrated and pro-
duced by VernaGillis.
4:00 UNSTUCK IN TIME
Live radio with Margot Adier.
6:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
MISCELLANY
6:30 NEWS
Reported by Abraham Aig. (11/1)
7:00 WELCOME TO THE MACHINE
Lindsay Audin continues his investiga-
tions of energy and science with an
effort to expose the economic bases of
technology. (11 12)
8:30 THE WORLDS OF BACH AND
HANDEL: KEYBOARD INSTRUMENTS
KNOWN BY HANDEL
A listen to Handel's favorite harpsi-
chord, made by Joannes Ruckers in
1612, and some recordings of a handful
of pipe organs with which Handel was
familiar. This sound tour guided by The
Laughing Cavalier.
10:30 FROM THE HAUNTED RADIO
A timeless lV2-hour daemonic drama
special, from BAI's award-winning,
love-to-be-loatesome infernal works by
H.P.
love-to-be-loathesome repertory
10:30 FROM THE HAUNTED RADIO
A timeless iy2-hour daemonic drama
special, from BAI's award-winning,
love-to-loathesome repertory company,
The Radio. Daring you with new sounds
of ghoulsih delight, we offer infernal
works by P.H. Lovecraft, John Colloer,
E.A. Poe, and others unnameable. " . .
the smell of old unopened rooms and
the sound of rabbits screaming." (J.
Thurber) With music by James Irsay and
Arthur Miller, recording and technical
effetcs by David Rapkin, and production
by Charles Potter. It will make you want
to howl. ;
11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
HALLOWEEN NIGHT
Live radio with Marion Weinstein.
12:00 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS 11:55 PROGRAM ANNOUNCEMENTS
LUNCHPAIL
Live radio with Paul Gorman.
10 October, 1976 Folio
RADIO UNNAMEABLE
Live rsidio with Bob Pass.
^ Ok^Ai Pit, i^f^f^ -lu^ hA^I**^ A/L*
'^4/? htri uiH-lis C^^ liJi ihL.
Hi
IJIU,
\Y
W^^'^^^I^K^
MAKE SOME FRIENDS THIS
MONTH
A group that emerged as an
important factor in ttie station's
efforts to regain its financial
equilibrium was tfie Friends of
WBAI. Tfiis organizations ener-
gy and dedication proved instru-
mental in helpmg the station
through a very difficult period.
The Friends are still with us,
providing the station with a
steady source of income by
holding various events and doing
renewal follow-up to insure our
continued stability. The names
of the local Friends coordinators
have appeared in the Folio in the
hopes that you would care to
give just a little more of your
time and energy to the station.
DO IT!
Thanks, Very Much
Bill Uonaghan
IF YOU'D LIKE TO BE A FRIEND TO
WBAI, CONTACT YOUR REGIONAL
COORDINATOR OF
FRIENDS OF WBAI
clo//ificd
List ot Regional Coordinator
and their phone numbers.
WESTCHESTER COUNTY
Gladys Osterman
15 Grove Street
Tarrytown, N.Y. 10591
(914) M El -4832
NEWJERSEY
(Vacant at the Moment)
NASSAU COUNTY
Mary Rode
114 Haven Lane
Levittown, N.Y. 11756
(516)735-7158
SUFFOLK COUNTY
Ed and Georgia Pearson
44 Bellhaven Road
Bellpon, N.Y. 11713
(516)286-8824
ROCKLAND COUNTY
Joan Gessner
P.O. Box 202
Monsey, N.Y. 10952
QUEENS
Steven Grivas
25-25 86th Street
Jackson Heights, N.Y. 11372
(212)639-8621
BROOKLYN
Dorothy Klein &
Ed Tennerello
115 Brighton 11th Street
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11235
(212)734-7193
BRONX
(Vacant at the Moment)
MANHATTAN
Peter Pearlman
Buy a specially designed WBAI T-Shirt featuring two cartoon figures drawn and
signed by artist Ed Keren. The shirts are -available in small, medium, large &
extra-large. Children's sizes small, medium & large. Colors and black & white.
Pnce $6, including postage and tax. Please specify size when ordering. Send
your check (payable to Padfica-WBAI, P.O. Box 12345, Church Street Station,
NewYork, N.Y. 10249.
PIA/VO TUNING
Days, eves, weekends.
Will travel within city linnits.
Call fvlichael at 693-4953.
CUSTOfASTICtCERS AMV
MES&A^Qe CUSToMPR\KiTia3'
'Sjit ^f-'-f "iTiCXimj WHITE. 01 ta.fii'o bed"
*l(o. I , »i/.y.o.»S/5. »7/,o, tiZiil "Ir/ii
WRITERS WANTED
Non-profit literary mag. in planning
stages. Send manuscripts. Con-
tributions for handling purposes are
helpful, l^/lanuscrlpts cannot be
returned without a stamped self-
addressed envelope.
Send manuscripts to: Literary
Mag., 309 Fulton Ave., Jersey City,
New Jersey 07305.
57th STREET PHOTOGRAPHY
WORKSHOP
Beginners wanting small groups.
Instruction in camera use and
darkroom techniques.
All ages.
Call 265-3364
after5:00P.M.
APARTMENT— BROOKLYN
PARK SLOPE
(SW) 1/4 Block from Prospect Park,
5 rooms, children welcome. Backyard,
Floor to ceiling bookselves in 2 rooms,
Fireplace, 220 wiring, 14 window^,
eat-in kitchen paneled, quality appli-
ances, easy parking, 2 stained glass
windows, $285. Write fully c/o Goldring
67-22 Roosevelt Avenue, Woodside,
NY. 1137. Safe Nighborhood.
WOMAN WITH VAN
LIGHT MOVING
866-6422 keep trying
Fine Folk Records
JD-200, Bob Coltman; Lonesome
Robin
JD-201, David Jones; Easy and
Slow
JD-202, Bob Coltman; Before They
Close The Minstrel Show
Send for detailed listing or $5.00
each (plus NY tax and 50* postage
per order)
Minstrel Records
35-41 72 St, Jackson Hts, NY 11372
SOUPCON CATERING
LUNCH — BRUNCH
MIDNIGHT SUPPERS
BREAKFAST IN BED
C:^|-^arre
7-6659
SCIENCE FICTION
WRITERS GROUP FORMING
Speculative fiction, fantasy, or techno-
oriented. All welcome. Call Maureen
274-5990
POPULAR PIANO
For Beginners & Not-So Beginners.
Natural. Pleasurable. Reasonable.
Steve Meyerowitz 212/864-3233.
THE LAUGHING CAVALIER IS NOW A
TAPE SUPPLIER: For he or she who
pays the price. T.L. Cavalier will trans-
fer select gems from his record collec-
tion onto cassettes or open reels for
your listening pleasure. Call 688-1919.
AN ANNOUNCEMENT!
Listeners! If you have any inte-
resting old or new photographs
that you think would add pizazz,
class, interest, beauty, and truth
to the Folio, as well as any
graphics of any sort, please send
them to Folio, WBAI. 359 East
62nd Street, New York, New York
10021. Enclose a stamped, self-
addressed envelope and we will
do our best to return the mater-
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tee that. Thank you.
Display Rates
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'/4 page (5% discount) 107.25
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Full page (20% discount) 360.00
3 or more insertions 5% additional discount
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Cover Rates [when available)
Back Cover (approx. '/i page) $225.00
Inside Back Cover (full page) 400.00
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aassifled Rates
per line (5 words per line, 4 line minimum) $1.00
September, 1976 Folio 11
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Pacifica Radio
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New York, N.Y. 10021
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